Distortion (mathematics)

In mathematics, the distortion is a measure of the amount by which a function from the Euclidean plane to itself distorts circles to ellipses. If the distortion of a function is equal to one, then it is conformal; if the distortion is bounded and the function is a homeomorphism, then it is quasiconformal. The distortion of a function ƒ of the plane is given by

H(z,f)  = \limsup_{r\to 0}\frac{\max_{|h|=r}|f(z+h)-f(z)|}{\min_{|h|=r}|f(z+h)-f(z)|}

which is the limiting eccentricity of the ellipse produced by applying ƒ to small circles centered at z. This geometrical definition is often very difficult to work with, and the necessary analytical features can be extrapolated to the following definition. A mapping ƒ : Ω  R2 from an open domain in the plane to the plane has finite distortion at a point x  Ω if ƒ is in the Sobolev space W1,1
loc
(Ω, R2), the Jacobian determinant J(x,ƒ) is locally integrable and does not change sign in Ω, and there is a measurable function K(x)  1 such that

|Df(x)|^2 \le K(x)|J(x,f)| \,

almost everywhere. Here Df is the weak derivative of ƒ, and |Df| is the Hilbert–Schmidt norm.

For functions on a higher-dimensional Euclidean space Rn, there are more measures of distortion because there are more than two principal axes of a symmetric tensor. The pointwise information is contained in the distortion tensor

G(x,f) =
\begin{cases}
|J(x,f)^{-2/n}D^Tf(x)Df(x)&\text{if }J(x,f)\not=0\\
I &\text{if }J(x,f)=0.
\end{cases}

The outer distortion KO and inner distortion KI are defined via the Rayleigh quotients

K_O(x) = \sup_{\xi\not=0}\frac{\langle G(x)\xi,\xi\rangle^{n/2}}{|\xi|^n},\quad K_O(x) = \sup_{\xi\not=0}\frac{\langle G^{-1}(x)\xi,\xi\rangle^{n/2}}{|\xi|^n}.

The outer distortion can also be characterized by means of an inequality similar to that given in the two-dimensional case. If Ω is an open set in Rn, then a function ƒ W1,1
loc
(Ω,Rn)
has finite distortion if its Jacobian is locally integrable and does not change sign, and there is a measurable function KO (the outer distortion) such that

|Df(x)|^n \le K_O(x)|J(x,f)| \,

almost everywhere.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, January 21, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.